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Introduction of a leucine half‐zipper engenders multiple high‐quality crystals of a recalcitrant tRNA synthetase
Author(s) -
Guo Min,
Shapiro Ryan,
Schimmel Paul,
Yang XiangLei
Publication year - 2010
Publication title -
acta crystallographica section d
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 1399-0047
DOI - 10.1107/s0907444909055462
Subject(s) - leucine zipper , zipper , crystallization , transfer rna , aminoacyl trna synthetase , crystallography , chemistry , alpha helix , helix (gastropod) , protein crystallization , stereochemistry , biology , rna , biochemistry , peptide sequence , circular dichroism , organic chemistry , ecology , algorithm , snail , computer science , gene
Although Escherichia coli alanyl‐tRNA synthetase was among the first tRNA synthetases to be sequenced and extensively studied by functional analysis, it has proved to be recalcitrant to crystallization. This challenge remained even for crystallization of the catalytic fragment. By mutationally introducing three stacked leucines onto the solvent‐exposed side of an α‐helix, an engineered catalytic fragment of the synthetase was obtained that yielded multiple high‐quality crystals and cocrystals with different ligands. The engineered α‐helix did not form a leucine zipper that interlocked with the same α‐helix from another molecule. Instead, using the created hydrophobic spine, it interacted with other surfaces of the protein as a leucine half‐zipper (LHZ) to enhance the crystal lattice interactions. The LHZ made crystal lattice contacts in all crystals of different space groups. These results illustrate the power of introducing an LHZ into helices to facilitate crystallization. The authors propose that the method can be unified with surface‐entropy reduction and can be broadly used for protein‐surface optimization in crystallization.

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